At its Nov. 25 meeting, the Northampton Energy and Sustainability Commission considered a staff request to renew online monitoring licenses for two municipal solar installations and decided to delay a funding vote pending more information.
Unidentified staff said the commission was being asked to allocate $4,000 from the commission’s revolving fund to renew monitoring for two arrays — about $2,000 for the Smith Vocational Agricultural High School system and a similar amount possibly required for the James House — because the city uses the monitoring platform for mandatory state reporting and to check system health. “We are asking to spend $4,000 total, so that we can get our online monitoring platforms back, which we need for mandatory state reporting, as well as just to check to make sure that everything is working properly,” staff stated.
Commissioners pressed for details. Several members asked whether the quoted amounts were annual fees, whether other vendors might offer lower or bulk pricing, and whether the monitoring is tied to specific inverter manufacturers (SolarEdge, Enphase). Commissioner Eric Winkler and others urged staff to obtain firm contract terms and explore alternatives before committing funds; Winkler said that without a clear contract duration it was difficult to proceed. The commission noted monitoring is useful but not time‑sensitive and instructed staff to shop for quotes and report back at the next meeting.
Outcome: No vote was taken. Staff will return with vendor comparisons, per‑year costs and contract durations before the commission considers authorizing the $4,000 expenditure.